This is an archive of past discussions with User:Rupert Clayton. Do not edit the contents of this page. If you wish to start a new discussion or revive an old one, please do so on the current talk page.
I inadvertently accredited Awadewit as the sole provider of the enormous pleasure that the John Boydell and Boydell Shakespeare Gallery articles gave me. Being an honest soul, she put me right. Instead, I'd like to give you this token of my appreciation not only for the Bowden articles but for the huge contribution you have made in the background to the Lakes articles. --ROGER DAVIEStalk17:09, 20 November 2007 (UTC)
Thanks, Roger, for the honour, which I'm glad but a little embarrassed to receive. Even though the English spellings are probably my responsibility, most of the Boydell material is indeed down to Awadewit. I'm going to see if I can pull my weight on this over the coming days. Rupert Clayton (talk) 22:26, 20 November 2007 (UTC)
So, my initial expansion of John Boydell and Boydell Shakespeare Gallery is complete. Now, we just need to copy edit and reorganize and I need to bolster up the sources a bit. I'm sure I can add a few more nuggets of information as I go through my notes again, but the bulk of the articles should be in place now (I did a research paper on Boydell a few years ago, so I already had all of the material on hand for the article). The "Shakespeare venture" section needs to be rewritten in John Boydell so that it is a summary of Boydell Shakespeare Gallery and both articles need good leads.
By the way, I hope you don't think I was steam-rolling over your contributions. I only noticed after I had pasted all of my stuff in that you had expanded the article a mere three days before I had. Before that, it was a stub for years. How ironic. Anyway, I tried to incorporate your material as much as possible. All of the facts dovetailed with mine (excellent!), so I usually just added them into other paragraphs I had. I hope this is acceptable.
We should work together and get the articles up to good article status. I'm not sure there is enough scholarship to warrant featured article status, but we can think about it.
By the way, your talk page indicates that you might be rather new to wikipedia but your contribution history doesn't. If you want any advice, I have been editing quite a bit in the last year. I know something about writing articles and the various reviewing processes here, if you have any questions. Nice to meet you! Awadewit | talk13:54, 20 November 2007 (UTC)
Hi Awadewit, and thanks for all that work on John Boydell. I'm not at all upset that you've added so much stuff to the article. I only happened on it, in the roundabout way of Wikipedia, by following a chain of links from David Roberts (painter) to the previously missing British Institution article, to the Shakespeare Gallery (which was the previous tenant at 52 Pall Mall). And in the way one does on Wikipedia, having found a good source, I couldn't resist adding a few details, with some inline comments.
I'm very happy to work with you to continue to raise the quality of the article (although I'm no scholar of Shakespeare, art history, or 18th-century London). And I'll be happy to give it a copy edit (at least there's a field in which I do have professional experience.)
You're right to detect that I've been a Wikipedia user/editor for quite a while, but that I'm not very strongly connected with any particular collaborative effort out there. But that does remind me that it's time to remove that Welcome banner from my talk page. More later... Rupert Clayton (talk) 16:05, 20 November 2007 (UTC)
That was a very bright banner. :) A copy editor! Wonderful! You can refine my horrendous prose. I just really threw it up there for starters. You'll see how rough it is when you get into it. Awadewit | talk01:47, 21 November 2007 (UTC)
I didn't realise that the DYK process was so complex, but I'm glad your prodding paid off and it's nice to see Boydell finally get his 4-6 hours of 21st-century fame. Congratulations! Rupert Clayton (talk) 16:23, 26 November 2007 (UTC)
Help testing Slideshow template
{{helpme}}
I am looking for Wikipedia users to help test browser compatibility for a new template that I'm proposing incorporating into Wikipedia (it's based on a template already operating on the French Wikipedia). You can view background and report your results at Wikipedia:Village_pump_(proposals)#Browser_tests.
Also, I'd be grateful for input from anyone with knowledge of <div>s or JavaScript, who can help analyze what's happening with this template in IE7 (link as above). Thanks! Rupert Clayton (talk) 20:12, 6 December 2007 (UTC)
Thanks for the ping back... I can work the HTML. Trouble is I've no Javascript skills at all... all I know is it looks a lot like C/C++ which I used to know really well. Sigh...
1. Left you a note on the talk... but lied... I got sidetracked here... Maquis_du_Vercors. Still needs TLC, and I'm not getting the slideshow, (now that I think of it, didn't earlier either... the javascript issue I suspect, natch). I "sense" you may get around in French... since you translated and found that template. Take a look then at the French articles (other is Vercors Plateau, or my searching really sucks! [It does, but that's another issue for another day <g>]) and maybe do a little TLC expansion and fixups. Leave the graphics alone for the moment at page top on the first. If I'm right, the stack of former pics will align in their current column, and the Slideshow will collapse into one panel. Anyhow... that's a test bed, and a small and remote enough article from heavy traffic we can get away with it for a few days.
Thanks for your continued interest and for setting up the [[Maquis du Vercors] testbed. Unfortunately, I'm pretty sure the template won't work for users of the English Wikipedia until the two required functions are added to Common.js. It may be possible to test the functions by adding them to your own Monobook.js, but that's just a guess and it's something I'll have to read up on.
OK. I added the functions to my Monobook.js. You can see them at User:Rupert_Clayton/monobook.js. However, they're designed to automate the divs in the template as originally copied from the French version. This means that the only way to get the slideshow to operate as a table would be to rework the functions to interact with the table-style version you have written. I know that I'm not competent to do that, and you say that you don't have JS skills. Therefore, reluctantly, I'm going to revert Template:Slideshow to the version that uses divs, in the hopes that (1) users can get it to work for the moment by adding the functions to their monobook.js, and that (2) someone will eventually help us with the IE7 behavior. I will place your table-based version at User:Rupert Clayton/slideshow template (table format), so it's easy for us to refer to or recover from if needed. Rupert Clayton (talk) 18:26, 13 December 2007 (UTC)
I'm surprised, however, that you can't see the slideshow working on the page fr:Pétra. Because it's in the French Wikipedia, it uses a different Common.js that does include the two functions needed. Are you saying that when you look at fr:Pétra each of the slideshows appears just as a vertical table of images? If so, then my guess is that Javascript is turned off in your browser. Let me know what you see and I can try to troubleshoot. Rupert Clayton (talk) 16:19, 13 December 2007 (UTC)
My cynical assumption about the lack of response was that VPP is mostly a place for people to propose ideas so that they can be quietly ignored. There doesn't seem to be a defined process for implementing ideas even when there's consensus. But maybe that's too harsh. Anyhow I'm determined to get the template considered, and accepted unless there's strong reasoned opposition. To get there probably will mean fixing the unpleasant display in IE7, which is tough but fair. Rupert Clayton (talk) 16:19, 13 December 2007 (UTC)
Cynicism??? Nawh... over optimism, with perhaps a mild ignorance of the ebb and flow of hidden rhythms inside the community...
On the above, suspect the advice I was given by CBDunkerson long ago about introduction of templates is best... go forth and hang at will. If the community likes, it will stick. If it is found offensive, or by some at least, you'll hear about it. I suggest you ask his advice as well, btw. In addition try asking at [Wikipedia talks: Templates, & Templates for discussion], [category talk:Wikipedia templates]. In short, as next below, anywhere and everywhere techies hang and congregate. Especially, the Pump at Mediawiki!!! If one can convince them it's a sitewide wise thing, then the common.css issue becomes automatically solved/resolved.
Unfortunately, in this case, with the Java script change needed, you obviously need a larger audience. Getting a well known technically savvy co-sponser (to the community) for the proposal would be my earliest goal... Submit asking the steps and places needed for a js add to the default page be asked both VPT and the main VP, with a link to the discussion. Blunt request for help and co-sponsers of the idea on the WP:VPT conference as well.
Perhaps you can locate and cite other wiki's [you gave discussions on the commons, but iirc, did not affirm that they adopted or did not... which would change the presentation.
Also, suggest visiting the other nine "en.sisters" and posting a link on their pump equivalent (some names vary) to the discussion on our VP. (If you want links, the top of my user pages have backlinks to those where I have an account). Me, I'd make up a boilerplate "request for comment", (another possible path! Do up an RFC!) and paste it in where ever it seems useful. Another "proselytizing measure"... ask on language/country wikiprojects pages whether their members know whether the feature has been adopted in the Spanish, the Dutch, the Polish... wiki's, and could they please comment on the pump section if so...
In short, you be involved in "high politics and misdemeanors" (sic, <BSEG>)... so you need to spend time since you want a community standard to be changed... the common.css, iirc. Lastly, there is some facility for announcements on either the village signpost, or on the main help page... don't recall what it's called, but posting a brief notice there is another good way to attract attention. (The measure I'm thinking of has a seven to ten day automatic "expiration" window... you'll know you found it by that. Ask user:Quiddity, too... he's real helpful and follows all the main standards pages and main page "mixes". Tell him I said hello! A consideration... wait until mid-January... this time of year all the acedemically involved editors are heavily involved in finals and end of terms and pending vacations... that at least, gives you a month to plan your "political campaign" <G>. This group, imho and experience, is about 75% or more of regular contributors herein on the project... a large factor, in other words! Even those not chained to acedemia are distracted by the holiday season now-abouts... in short your cynicism is unwarranted as these are likely large factors!
On the table change over (i.e. your note, my talk), NBD. No harm, no foul. If it won't work with the script you suggest... but that may mean the script should be changed to accept either... something I can technically imagine, but not being a script-hound, can't guarantee. In any event, I made a few other "flexibility changes", iirc. If you just re-massage the table statements:
<tr>, </tr>, <td>, </td> imbedded in comments,
<table>, </table> replaced by keyword div and
I'd just comment the table keywords out inside the same
and add a header comment that the table doesn't work with the proposed js.
... saves someone else some time down the road, or someone who knows how to
make THAT method work, can then pee in it and generalize the 'js' for same.
... that will keep those and notify others of the technical "issue" between tables and divs.
Think Team work, and let others help! This may be a couple months battle... just don't get discouraged! By all means, consider this "early days". I'll do what I can to help, but a push in mid-January will find me in a better way scheduling-wise too! If you delay the full court press until then, I can split up the message dropping and such and ease the tedium.
re: (from above) I'm surprised, however, that you can't see the slideshow working on the page fr:Pétra. Because it's in the French Wikipedia, it uses a different Common.js that does include the two functions needed. Are you saying that when you look at fr:Pétra each of the slideshows appears just as a vertical table of images? If so, then my guess is that Javascript is turned off in your browser. Let me know what you see and I can try to troubleshoot. Rupert Clayton (talk) 16:19, 13 December 2007 (UTC)
No evidence of any slideshow seen by me in examining all images on that page more than once... as I suggested on the pump, suspect it has something to do with browser language settings. I didn't look in edit mode, but a caption would be helpful to know which is the one/ones that are slideshowing! If the commons has adopted it, would be the best example! We all read English! // FrankB16:10, 14 December 2007 (UTC)
DYK
On 3 February, 2008, Did you know? was updated with a fact from the article George Nicol, which you created or substantially expanded. If you know of another interesting fact from a recently created article, then please suggest it on the Did you know? talk page.
I think that's a great idea, though the work is almost all yours. I did want to try to work in more about the building's architecture. It appears to have been one of George Dance the Younger's more notable works, and was the first building to use the Ammonite Order of column capitals. There's quite a bit on this in the Building of London source. However, I can't imagine I'll get a chance to put much time into it before January, as I have a job interview, and there's also that holiday thing going on. Do you want to go for peer review now or wait till January? Rupert Clayton (talk) 17:33, 17 December 2007 (UTC)
Oh, we should definitely wait until you add that material. I'm so glad you found it! I'll just keep polishing the article until then. Good luck with the interview! Awadewit | talk18:58, 17 December 2007 (UTC)
I'd be happy to work on it, yes, but tomorrow I'm off to Amsterdam for the opening of the Millais exhibition at the VG museum there and will probably be wiki-incomunicado until next week. I have some literature on Bydell at home though, so I might get a little bit of time tonight. Best wishes. The article looks very impressive at the moment. Paul B (talk) 17:52, 12 February 2008 (UTC)
I think that Boydell Shakespeare Gallery is just about ready for FAC. I have added some material from the catalogue and slightly reorganized the article. I am going to copy edit it some more. Let me know what you think. Awadewit (talk) 18:15, 19 April 2008 (UTC)
First of all, I will like to thank you for your congratulations. I was really surprised of receiving your message. As well, I will like to congratulate you, as I notice you are one of the main contributors of the article. In any case, I decided to translate the Boydell Shakespeare Gallery article, because it is well written, the prose flows smoothly, and it is very interesting. I am a student of architecture and art, and it served me as an important source of knowledge of 18th century British art history related to Shakespeare. Additionally, in Spanish there are few book references about the gallery and its history, therefore, I belief that through Wikipedia in Spanish people will be able to learn more about this topic. At this time, I am trying to improve the quality of the articles related to art, literature, and architecture in Spanish. Thank you again, and I hope you continue contributing to Wikipedia. I hope to hear from you in the future.--Taty2007 (talk) 00:25, 10 June 2008 (UTC)
On November 13, 2009, Did you know? was updated with a fact from the article Manchester and Salford Yeomanry, which you created or substantially expanded. You are welcome to check how many hits your article got while on the front page (here's how) and add it to DYKSTATS if it got over 5,000. If you know of another interesting fact from a recently created article, then please suggest it on the Did you know? talk page.
A noiseless patient spider, I mark'd where on a little promontory it stood isolated, Mark'd how to explore the vacant vast surrounding, It launch'd forth filament, filament, filament, out of itself, Ever unreeling them, ever tirelessly speeding them.
And you O my soul where you stand, Surrounded, detached, in measureless oceans of space, Ceaselessly musing, venturing, throwing, seeking the spheres to connect them, Till the bridge you will need be form'd, till the ductile anchor hold, Till the gossamer thread you fling catch somewhere, O my soul."
Cheers! I'm just poking around, adding a couple of somewhat random facts. They really need a good assessment and rewrite, but that would take some work. Rupert Clayton (talk) 00:47, 21 February 2012 (UTC)
It would take a lot of work; there's well over a thousand years' worth of them to get through as I'm sure you know, and the story sometimes seems a bit unclear. Still, nothing ventured, nothing gained. MalleusFatuorum01:37, 21 February 2012 (UTC)
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I have lately been proposing to merge these two articles http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Safavid_dynasty and http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Afsharid_Dynasty and name the article "Third Persian Empire" or "Early Modern Persian Empire". Reason being is because both empires were virtually the same empire with a different dynasty. Much like how the Roman and Byzantine Empires went through different Dynasties, Nadir Shah took over the Safavid Empire and declared himself Shah of Iran, thus a new dynasty was put on the throne of the Safavid Empire and was renamed the Afsharid Empire. What do you think of this proposal? Keeby101 (talk) 07:12, 11 August 2013 (UTC)
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the second highest volcano in Turkey with an elevation of {{convert|4058|m|ft|0|abbr=on|disp=or}}) and has the second highest prominence of the [[Armenian Highland]], after [[Mount Ararat]].
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Thanks for the note, but I really don't have any input; all I've ever seen is a single reprint edition from which scans couldn't easily be made. I'm no image expert, so I can't offer comments on the download process, but I do appreciate that you're working on it; the S&D image at Cedar-Bank Works really helps a lot, and I'm sure others would be similarly helpful for (nonexistent, as of yet) similar articles on major Hopewell sites such as Highbanks, Frankfort, or Trefoil, not to mention out-of-state locations such as Fudge in Indiana or those effigy mounds in Wisconsin. Nyttend (talk) 04:28, 26 June 2014 (UTC)
Assistance cleaning up lithograph scans
I saw your recent request at the Commons photography workshop and I've been doing a little tinkering. It looks like you had some issue with extracting the images, so I've downloaded the original PDF, which I can open directly into Photoshop. I have some experience of this type of work, and it looks like an interesting/worthy project, so I'd like to offer you some help. Give me a list of the pages that you'd like converting and I'll make a start. Regards, nagualdesign16:26, 28 June 2014 (UTC)
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Hi, I read your note on my talk page. I had removed the chapter number and name because it was printing before the title. I restored it, but it's still doing it. Yoninah (talk) 20:07, 2 December 2014 (UTC)
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Christie’s has given me permission to send paper copies, but not digital. Please email me (contact information) a physical address to which I can post a paper copy of what I have. A work address or PO Box would be fine — anything I can write on an envelope. JDAWiseman (talk) 23:59, 23 December 2014 (UTC)
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I noticed your edit which moved the reference into the article to support this sentence, "Arabic culture formed the main component of their identity instead of their Kurdish heritage." I should tell you the source does not mention Arab culture, but that a visitor in 1252 had to have an interpreter that spoke Arabic to speak to the Ayyubid ruler. It would be original research for the sentence to say "Arabic culture formed the main component of their identity" simply because they spoke Arabic. --Kansas Bear (talk) 03:16, 12 February 2015 (UTC)
You are in luck. I found, The Cambridge History of Africa, Volume 3, ed. J. D. Fage, Roland Anthony Oliver, page 37, "In the Ayyubid epoch the rise of Egypt as the most important centre of Arabic culture became more apparent". I will add it to the article. --Kansas Bear (talk) 03:41, 12 February 2015 (UTC)
Thanks for fixing this. I was trying to redirect the discussion of the languages spoken by Ayyubid rulers and their subjects to the body of the article and away from notes in the infobox. I assumed, given its placement, that the reference spoke to the Arabization of the Ayyubid family (which it does, but not as broadly as I assumed). I think the section covers a complex subject pretty evenly now. Unfortunately, there will be some who would prefer to reduce this kind of complex cultural interplay to a triumphal narrative for their favored ethnicity. Rupert Clayton (talk) 01:26, 13 February 2015 (UTC)
[[File:The Great Sphinx, Pyramids of Gizeh-1839) by David Roberts, RA.jpg|thumb|''The Great Sphinx (and) Pyramids of Girzeh (Giza) 17 July 1839'',
1818, Roberts decorated [[James Maitland, 8th Earl of Lauderdale|Lord Lauderdale]]'s Dunbar House (known later as [[Dunbar#Notable_Buildings|Lauderdale House]] and then the library of [[Craigcrook
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Would you please review your edits at Lake Urmia#Islands because there is an invalid {{convert}} with "1280m" after "when the lake level drops below about". I cannot see mention of anything like that in the source, so you might like to check that also. Thanks. Johnuniq (talk) 01:45, 15 August 2015 (UTC)
Urmia
Dear Rupert, thanks for noticing I've been warned about edit warring multiple times already, but if you look my opponents more carefully (AnarchistFakest & Averysoda), you'll realized both are socks and banned forever. Discussion is always more polite of course, but little provoking DICKERY with edit wars can also be useful because it saves time. However, when discussing with someone who has ten years of editing, it's much different. Anyway, I put inter-blank inside an article and I left explanation on talk page. Greetings. --MehrdadFR (talk) 02:02, 12 November 2015 (UTC)
<3 Thanks for being awesome. Enjoy the holidays :)
We will take the "in other projects"-sidebar out of beta features in January (phabricator:T103102)
Making ranking information like label and statement counts available to the CirrusSearch index in order to improve ranking in search results (phabricator:T110648)
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Fixed a mistake in the set reference API documentation (gerrit:259171)
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Changes in how authentication in MediaWiki is handled are being rolled out (and more coming). [1] Ordinary users and gadgets / user scripts should not be affected but bots may need to be adjusted. pywikibot already supports [2] OAuth authentication, though bot operators need to set that up for their bot.
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Amir and Aaron are turning ORES into an extension to make it easier for you to spot bad edits \o/
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Work on first prototype for Commons support - specifically by making it possible to have more entity types than just Item and Property (phabricator:T125822)
In order to deploy the ORES extension on Wikidata we need a few more people to help with a labeling campaign. ORES will help us a lot with anti-vandalism fighting.
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Added a new identifiers section in items. Everything with datatype external identifier goes there now. Once we have all identifiers converted items should be easier to scan and understand because of the clearer structure.
We have a patch upcoming that should reduce loading time of items with a lot of sitelinks by 25%
Fixed a bug where you could not add statements with external identifier or mathematical expression datatype (phabricator:T127095)
More groundwork for Commons (making it possible to have more entities than just items and properties)
Wikiversity is now supported by Wikidata as well. Language links can be maintained on Wikidata now. Access to the data will follow. Welcome, sister!
Wikidata now has cross-wiki notifications as a beta feature. You can enable it in your preferences. Once enabled you will see notifications you received on the other Wikimedia wikis.
Property:P1367 ("BBC Your Paintings artist-ID") has become "Art UK artist identifier". Identifier values were replaced.
The number of claims on each item is to be included in the "page property" database table. For some items where it had been missing, it was recently added. This leads to improved coverage by database reports: without claims by site.
Mix'n'match has new catalogs: Artists of the Nationalmuseum in Sweden and Encyclopædia Britannica
Wikidata Query Service now allows to view images linked from Commons and display image galley if the query result has images. Example: Paintings by Gustav Klimt
Fixed a bug in Special:NewItem which prevented submission of the form (phabricator:T128075)
More performance work
In diffs for mathematical expressions we're now also showing the TeX source to make it possible to see changes that do not affect the rendering of the formula (phabricator:T125712)
More work on cleaning up languages for multilingual text values and labels/descriptions/aliases
Lucie and Charlie handed in their Bachelor theses on the Article Placeholder and Editing Wikidata from Wikipedia. Work on both topics will continue. We'll publish both theses soon. A big congrats to both of them!
This article from Russian Wikipedia is generated only with Lua Module and Listeria, based on its Wikidata item.
If you're into Wikidata, GLAM and Facebook there is now a Facebook group for you.
There are 4 new games to help with the migration of the Persondata template on English Wikipedia.
There was a huge increase in the number of qualifiers over the last 2 weeks. It went from 2.6 to 3.7 Million due to additions of qualifiers for evidence codes on human and mouse proteins.
Interested in seeing Wikidata training sessions at Wikimania? Add yourself to interested attendees for the sessions.
Substantially reduced server load for item and property displaying (phab:T132662)
There are currently some issues with the order of latitude/longitude inn coordinates in the query service map visualization. It will be fixed tonight.
Removed unsupported sort and dir parameters from the wikibase.api.RepoApi JavaScript module. This may break user JavaScript calling getEntitiesByPage (phab:T119856).
Worked on new flyers for institutions that want to cooperate with Wikidata and developers wanting to use our data (will be published on Commons once they're done)
Moved forward with internationalization of the query service interface (not on translatewiki.net yet but being worked on)
Worked on making it possible to extend SPARQL queries in simplified natural language version. It will also no longer add query prefixes when editing the query. Those are not live yet.
Fixed a bug where admins got a blank page when trying to view deleted revisions (phabricator:T132645)
Investigating issues with bad suggestions for properties when adding new statements (phabricator:T132839)
Our Main Page now has a section for popular items to show you what is trending on Wikidata based on several people editing an item over the last few days
Hi. Thank you for your recent edits. Wikipedia appreciates your help. We noticed though that when you edited Salvia hasankeyfensis, you added links pointing to the disambiguation pages Calyx and Corolla. Such links are almost always unintended, since a disambiguation page is merely a list of "Did you mean..." article titles. Read the FAQ • Join us at the DPL WikiProject.
Worked on creating mediainfo entities on demand when a file is viewed that doesn't have an associated mediainfo entity yet. This is needed for structured data support for Commons.
Worked on making it possible to embed query results in other websites. You can get a preview at https://jonaskress.github.io
Added timeline as a possible visualization for the query service.
Investigated issues with downloading query result sets in Safari.
Got ArticlePlaceholder ready for the second round of Wikipedias.
Fixed bug where map wasn't enabled as a possible visualization for queries with cooridnates.
You can soon specify the color of the bubbles in a bubble chart visualization. (phabricator:T137061)
Fixed a bug with terms sometimes not showing up, language fallback not working correctly in Lua modules and connection to master database
Fixed a bug with URL encoding in the query service.
Hello, I'm BracketBot. I have automatically detected that your edit to Niobe may have broken the syntax by modifying 1 "[]"s. If you have, don't worry: just edit the page again to fix it. If I misunderstood what happened, or if you have any questions, you can leave a message on my operator's talk page.
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]. The English artist [[Richard Wilson (painter)|Richard Wilson]] gained great acclaim for his ''[[The Destruction of the Children of Niobe]'', painted in 1760. Three notable works, all dating from
ORDER BY RAND() LIMIT 100 can avoid timeouts on Wikidata Query Service (source)
Development
Worked on making it easier to add new query examples right from the query service by just clicking a button. There are some technical issues with it still though. Will take a while to sort through.
More work on creating new Media-Info entities (the equivalent of item for media file data) on the fly (phabricator:T134259)
EasyQuery is now a gadget that you can enable in your preferences. It gives you an icon next to each statement value. That gives you a list of other items with the same statement.
Stats have been updated and show a significant jump in references.
There is now a 100wikidatadays challenge based on the 100wikidays challenge for Wikipedia. The goal: convert 100 templates to make use of Wikidata over the course of 100 days.
Thiemo wrote a user script to pre-fill "date retrieved" in a reference with the current date. Please test and let us know what you think ont he linked page. If you like it it can become a gadget.
More groundwork for Commons. We can now save a statement in the new MediaInfo entity type \o/ (Some minor issues still with the demo system but should be solved next week.)
Fixed a display issue with description tooltips in recent changes. Thanks Matěj Suchánek! (phabricator:T89663)
Refactored quite some of the sitelinks-related JavaScript code (phabricator:T127056 and gerrit:294687. This may break some existing gadgets and user scripts temporarily.
Updated the graphic representing the data model in Wikidata: long, medium, short
Fixed problem with editing statements on Wikidata, after last week's deployment (phabricator:T138974)
Started interviews to find user needs and workflows for automated list generation (phabricator:T139284)
Working on an infographic to represent the flow of data in Wikidata
Work on multi-content revisions in order to be able to store an entity (item, property, mediainfo) and wiki text in the same page (This is needed for Commons) (phabricator:T107595)
Did more interviews with editors as preparation for the work on automated list generation for Wikipedia and co based on Wikidata data
Fixed a bug with data parsing in Korean and a few other languages (phabricator:T139509)
Added "non" as a language code for monolingual text values (phabricator:T137115)
Removed display of calendar model for dates with precision of 10 years or larger (phabricator:T133973)
Fixed issues in some of the forms on special pages on mobile (phabricator:T138413)
Hello, I've noticed that you are creating a lot of useful articles, the large majority of which are of good quality. I would like to encourage you to become an autopatrolled user - this allows the pages you create to be automatically marked as reviewed, reducing the workload of reviewers. You can request for this right at Wikipedia:Requests for permissions/Autopatrolled. Thanks! Darylgolden(talk)Ping when replying01:57, 7 September 2016 (UTC)
Hi Rupert Clayton, I just wanted to let you know that I have added the "autopatrolled" permission to your account, as you have created numerous, valid articles. This feature will have no effect on your editing, and is simply intended to reduce the workload on new page patrollers. For more information on the patroller right, see Wikipedia:Autopatrolled. Feel free to leave me a message if you have any questions. Happy editing! Widr (talk) 05:57, 7 September 2016 (UTC)
Reference errors on 3 October
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Hi. Thank you for your recent edits. Wikipedia appreciates your help. We noticed though that when you edited 262 Southwest Anatolia earthquake, you added a link pointing to the disambiguation page Cyrene. Such links are almost always unintended, since a disambiguation page is merely a list of "Did you mean..." article titles. Read the FAQ • Join us at the DPL WikiProject.
Hi. Thank you for your recent edits. Wikipedia appreciates your help. We noticed though that when you edited Hovhannes Kajaznuni, you added a link pointing to the disambiguation page Karakilisa. Such links are almost always unintended, since a disambiguation page is merely a list of "Did you mean..." article titles. Read the FAQ • Join us at the DPL WikiProject.
Hello, Rupert Clayton. Voting in the 2016 Arbitration Committee elections is open from Monday, 00:00, 21 November through Sunday, 23:59, 4 December to all unblocked users who have registered an account before Wednesday, 00:00, 28 October 2016 and have made at least 150 mainspace edits before Sunday, 00:00, 1 November 2016.
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Hi. Thank you for your recent edits. Wikipedia appreciates your help. We noticed though that when you edited Bernard Montgomery, you added a link pointing to the disambiguation page Harry's Bar. Such links are almost always unintended, since a disambiguation page is merely a list of "Did you mean..." article titles. Read the FAQ • Join us at the DPL WikiProject.
Hi. Thankyou for your participation in the challenge series or/and contests. In November The Women in Red World Contest is being held to try to produce new articles for as many countries worldwide and occupations as possible. There will be over $4000 in prizes to win, including Amazon vouchers and paid subscriptions. If this would appeal to you and you think you'd be interested in contributing new articles on women during this month for your region or wherever please sign up in the participants section. The articles done may also count towards the ongoing challenge. If you're not interested in prize money yourself but are willing to participate and raise money to buy books about women for others to use, this is also fine. Help would also be appreciated in drawing up the lists of missing articles. If you think of any missing articles please add them to the sub lists by continent at Missing articles. Thankyou, and if taking part, good luck!♦ Dr. Blofeld16:30, 4 October 2017 (UTC)
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Hello, Rupert Clayton. Voting in the 2017 Arbitration Committee elections is now open until 23.59 on Sunday, 10 December. All users who registered an account before Saturday, 28 October 2017, made at least 150 mainspace edits before Wednesday, 1 November 2017 and are not currently blocked are eligible to vote. Users with alternate accounts may only vote once.
The Arbitration Committee is the panel of editors responsible for conducting the Wikipedia arbitration process. It has the authority to impose binding solutions to disputes between editors, primarily for serious conduct disputes the community has been unable to resolve. This includes the authority to impose site bans, topic bans, editing restrictions, and other measures needed to maintain our editing environment. The arbitration policy describes the Committee's roles and responsibilities in greater detail.
I've just tagged the page, using our page curation tools, as having some issues to fix. Please add the references from the French page, or see if you can find some English references to improve the page. Happy editing!
The tags can be removed by you or another editor once the issues they mention are addressed. If you have questions, you can leave a comment on my talk page. Or, for more editing help, talk to the volunteers at the Teahouse.
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Thank you for your hasty accusations, and I have even noticed that you thought I am an "overzealous" editor. Where is your good faith? I don't give a damn about the Kurdish-Arabic feud, I don't belong to any of these groups.
"According to Yasser Tabbaa, an anthropologist specializing in medieval Islamic culture,[1] the Ayyubid rulers who reigned in the late 12th-century were far removed from their Kurdish origins, and unlike their Seljuq predecessors and their Mamluk successors, they were firmly "Arabized." The citation is completely irrelevant (why would you cite the profile of an anthropologist? Should I start citing the profile of a random biologist in an article about evolution?), and as you can see, the sentence is not sourced, unless you are claiming that it is contained in Angold 2006. Now you have added a proper citation, so it's completely good to be in the article, but please notice that previously the citation was completely absent, and you can't expect all new readers to know that that sentence used to be properly cited before someone decided to put a random link to a biography.
Read carefully before you start accusing me as being "destructive". The only part that I deleted there was "When Saladin restored Sunni orthodoxy in Egypt, 10 madrasas were established during his reign, and an additional 25 during the entire Ayyubid period of rule. Each of their locations had religious, political, and economic significance, in particular those in al-Fustat." I have read Yeomans p. 111, and it's not there at all. Leaving that sentence would also not be consistent with the last sentence in the paragraph: "About 26 schools were built in Egypt, Jerusalem and Damascus by high-ranking government officials, and unusual for the time, commoners also founded in Egypt about 18 schools, including two medical institutions." I also restructured the paragraph in accordance with the flow of the source.
The fact remains that it is irrelevant to the section, you can move it as you please, but I did not do it because I noticed there is a chronological flow from top to bottom.
Is that campaign PART of the Third Crusades? The USA was fighting Japan at the same time while they were fighting Nazi Germany, does not mean we should just put random info on USA attacking Guadalcanal in an article about the Western Front?
Next time read carefully before you start being overly alarmist or even a crybaby over other people trying to fix your work. If you think it's so perfect and you don't want any outsiders to disturb it, then don't put it on Wikipedia. Mimihitam (talk) 17:39, 21 November 2018 (UTC)
@Mimihitam: I know you're upset about my criticism, but it was directed specifically at your editing actions, not your motivations. I would appreciate it if you would refrain from ad hominem attacks. The fact remains that every piece of text you deleted reflects reliable sources, almost all of which were already given in the article. If some text strikes you as being in the wrong place, the correct response is to move it, not delete it.Rupert Clayton (talk) 21:17, 21 November 2018 (UTC)
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